On 16 January 1833, the young Victoria wrote in her diary: “At 1/4 past 12 we went out. Little Dashy went with us. He is a dear little dog … so fond of Mamma that he will never leave her.” Enter the King Charles spaniel known variously as Dash or Dashy – just one of the bewildering number of dogs which romped, begged and dozed in royal chambers, lawns and kennels from Balmoral to Osborne House, across almost 70 years. Given the cold and relatively friendless nature of Victoria’s early life, it is little wonder that she became devoted to “sweet Dashy”, whose health, travels and minor accidents are thoroughly detailed in her diaries.

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Before Dash died in late 1840, he had enjoyed the company of Prince Albert’s greyhound, Eos – of whom Queen Victoria remarked on 12 October 1839: “she is so gentle, and so clever; gives her paw; jumps an immense height, eats off a fork.” On 27 January 1842, the gentle Eos had a close shave when out with a shooting party at Windsor. A stray shot from Victoria’s Uncle Ferdinand struck the dog in the lung, causing much anxiety in following weeks. It wasn’t until early March that the queen at last found it “a pleasure to see dear ‘Eos’ so well again, running about & playing with Cairnach”, another of Victoria’s dogs."

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